Simon Owens began a radio career on 18 December 1995 as the producer of Nightline and Remember When on Radio 3AW. The programs are hosted by Bruce Mansfield and Philip Brady. He continues in that role together with now being an on-air contributor to Nightline and Remember When.
He now hosts weekend mid-dawn shifts when either Keith McGowan or Alan Pearsall take leave.
He is the nephew of Geoff Corke, the first man to appear on television in Melbourne, Australia.
In February 1994 he proposed to his wife on Red Faces on the Television show Hey Hey It's Saturday
He now hosts weekend mid-dawn shifts when either Keith McGowan or Alan Pearsall take leave.
He is the nephew of Geoff Corke, the first man to appear on television in Melbourne, Australia.
In February 1994 he proposed to his wife on Red Faces on the Television show Hey Hey It's Saturday
Truxedo is a comapany that makes covers for the back of a pickup truck, called tonneau covers by retailers.. Since the original Truxedo, the company has introduced 7 new versions, including the TruXedo Lo Pro, TruXedoPlus, TruXport, TruxSeal, Pro-Tex, TruXedo Deuce and the TruXedo Lo Pro QT. the name is a play on the words truck and tuxedo, the implication being that the product fancies up your truck.
The Kennington Skateboarding Bowl is a skateboarding facility situated nest to the northernmost entrance to Kennington Park, in South London. The bowl was erected in 1978 on the site of some derelict netball courts.
The bowl was originally made with no coping and and no vertical sections. Instead it is modelled on Californian school yard banks. It is a similar design to the Meanwhile Two in Royal Oak (North London) except Kennington's bowl has two panels of flat bottom (arguably making it easier to skate) and no Gonz gap. Kennington Bowl is currently in a state of partial disrepair with many of the panels having become misaligned creating certain areas that are difficult to roll over. In the early part of the noughties a local skater made and installed a section of swimming pool styled coping of about 2 metres in length. The bowl enojoys a muted popularity with small numbers of generally older skateboarders frequenting it irregularly, usually during the weekends.
The bowl was originally made with no coping and and no vertical sections. Instead it is modelled on Californian school yard banks. It is a similar design to the Meanwhile Two in Royal Oak (North London) except Kennington's bowl has two panels of flat bottom (arguably making it easier to skate) and no Gonz gap. Kennington Bowl is currently in a state of partial disrepair with many of the panels having become misaligned creating certain areas that are difficult to roll over. In the early part of the noughties a local skater made and installed a section of swimming pool styled coping of about 2 metres in length. The bowl enojoys a muted popularity with small numbers of generally older skateboarders frequenting it irregularly, usually during the weekends.
Cosmo Speedway is the recording duo of Shane Reed and Nick Grosvenor. "If every Genre of music had an orgy, we would be its love child," says the San Diego born band. With two critically received full length albums, the band works to expand the releases' limited digital distribution. While Reed writes the tunes for Cosmo Speedway, Grosvenor writes material for his own project, Wilderness Survival. As Co-Producers, band members, and childhood friends, the two always simultaneously record each new album.
Discography
Recent Years
In early 2006 Reed and Grosvenor began work on the third Cosmo Speedway record entitled "Evolution of the Bicycle." They've expressed interest in creating a number of music videos for the new batch of songs. Experimenting with Stop Motion Animation, Stereoscopic Imaging, Lo-fi video, and various Film formats. They have also expressed interest in creating a new album every 6 months, but that prolific output has yet to be seen.
Early years
Reed Spent a number of years in the mid to late 90's creating numerous mix tapes in his bedroom on a four track tape machine and released them in limited supply through the local San Diego music scene. There are thought to be at least 10-15 full unreleased records in existence under the moniker, "Tork". Reed has said "most of those records were just odd bleeps and buzzes and found sounds but there's a few things in that batch that I'm really proud of." In late 2002, after studying animation and film in college at LMU, Reed partnered up with childhood friend Nick Grosvenor and began to create the earliest inceptions of what was to become "Cosmo Speedway." Recording primarily on high end digital consoles including Logic and Pro Tools, all sounds and ideas come mostly from Reed and sometimes Grosvenor. The two seem to pride themselves on recording without the help of anyone else, isolated in their own environment.
Traveling Bloodcells
In 2005, the band's debut album, Traveling Bloodcells, was released on Catch Camera Records. This young first album mixes a raw sensibility with a hint of what would later be elaborated upon.
Exoskeleton
In 2006, Cosmo Speedway released its second record entitled Exoskeleton. In Del Mar, California, Exoskeleton and the second Wilderness Survival album were written and recorded in three weeks. This event was recorded in the feature documentary entitled "21 Days."
* ·
* ·
Discography
Recent Years
In early 2006 Reed and Grosvenor began work on the third Cosmo Speedway record entitled "Evolution of the Bicycle." They've expressed interest in creating a number of music videos for the new batch of songs. Experimenting with Stop Motion Animation, Stereoscopic Imaging, Lo-fi video, and various Film formats. They have also expressed interest in creating a new album every 6 months, but that prolific output has yet to be seen.
Early years
Reed Spent a number of years in the mid to late 90's creating numerous mix tapes in his bedroom on a four track tape machine and released them in limited supply through the local San Diego music scene. There are thought to be at least 10-15 full unreleased records in existence under the moniker, "Tork". Reed has said "most of those records were just odd bleeps and buzzes and found sounds but there's a few things in that batch that I'm really proud of." In late 2002, after studying animation and film in college at LMU, Reed partnered up with childhood friend Nick Grosvenor and began to create the earliest inceptions of what was to become "Cosmo Speedway." Recording primarily on high end digital consoles including Logic and Pro Tools, all sounds and ideas come mostly from Reed and sometimes Grosvenor. The two seem to pride themselves on recording without the help of anyone else, isolated in their own environment.
Traveling Bloodcells
In 2005, the band's debut album, Traveling Bloodcells, was released on Catch Camera Records. This young first album mixes a raw sensibility with a hint of what would later be elaborated upon.
Exoskeleton
In 2006, Cosmo Speedway released its second record entitled Exoskeleton. In Del Mar, California, Exoskeleton and the second Wilderness Survival album were written and recorded in three weeks. This event was recorded in the feature documentary entitled "21 Days."
* ·
* ·